Amanita
Maester
Well, I’ve finished the story I’ve been working on for the last few months. I haven’t yet published anything
and therefore haven’t reached the stage where I have to create three books a year or anything like that. That’s why I want to wait a while before starting revision.
Anyway, curiosity gripped me and I looked through older stuff I’ve written and saved on my computer. There I stumbled over a Harry Potter-fanfiction I had written in 2009. And well, this stuff was really, really good.
I had to force myself to leave the PC before I had finished reading through the 20 chapters because I had other things to do of course. It’s really the first time, that something like that’s happened to me with my own writing.
Just, that it isn’t really mine.
I feel the desire to finish that story now (I stopped in the middle back then) but rationally, I know that this isn’t really useful. The German Harry Potter fandom has almost died anyway, so I wouldn’t even find many readers for free and it wouldn’t help me with my “hopeful-writing career” ahem.
The story has Bellatrix Lestrange, her husband Rodolphus and Neville Longbottom as its narrators; Neville’s parents are also playing an important part, for anyone who’s familiar with Harry Potter. Bellatrix is a relatively prominent villain character but my version of her has probably very little in common with that of JK Rowling, Rodolphus is nothing more than a name in the books; Neville is one of the more central characters.
It's pretty dark as fromer HP readers might be able to guess.
And now the most frustrating part and something I can’t really explain to myself. All three fanfic characters seem to be much more three-dimensional than my own and for some odd reason; I’ve been more successful in writing the world from their eyes than I’ve ever been with mine. Some of the flaws I’ve noticed when having my characters experience strong emotions simply don’t exist there.
My own characters always remain more distant, despite of the fact that I’ve been working with those characters since 2007.
Does anyone have any idea, why this might be and what I could do about it?
Thank you for reading.
Anyway, curiosity gripped me and I looked through older stuff I’ve written and saved on my computer. There I stumbled over a Harry Potter-fanfiction I had written in 2009. And well, this stuff was really, really good.
I had to force myself to leave the PC before I had finished reading through the 20 chapters because I had other things to do of course. It’s really the first time, that something like that’s happened to me with my own writing.
Just, that it isn’t really mine.
I feel the desire to finish that story now (I stopped in the middle back then) but rationally, I know that this isn’t really useful. The German Harry Potter fandom has almost died anyway, so I wouldn’t even find many readers for free and it wouldn’t help me with my “hopeful-writing career” ahem.
The story has Bellatrix Lestrange, her husband Rodolphus and Neville Longbottom as its narrators; Neville’s parents are also playing an important part, for anyone who’s familiar with Harry Potter. Bellatrix is a relatively prominent villain character but my version of her has probably very little in common with that of JK Rowling, Rodolphus is nothing more than a name in the books; Neville is one of the more central characters.
It's pretty dark as fromer HP readers might be able to guess.
And now the most frustrating part and something I can’t really explain to myself. All three fanfic characters seem to be much more three-dimensional than my own and for some odd reason; I’ve been more successful in writing the world from their eyes than I’ve ever been with mine. Some of the flaws I’ve noticed when having my characters experience strong emotions simply don’t exist there.
My own characters always remain more distant, despite of the fact that I’ve been working with those characters since 2007.
Does anyone have any idea, why this might be and what I could do about it?
Thank you for reading.
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